ByKate Greene, Technology ReviewJanuary 31, 2011

The cameras in most mobile phones are an afterthought. This has left an opening for programmers to step in and develop software to make the images produced by smart phones much better.

One roadblock to this effort has been the cameras themselves—their very design imposes limits on what a photographer can reasonably capture. Now Stanford professor MarcLevoy has created an app that changes what the iPhone's camera is capable of.

Called SynthCam, Levoy's software lets the iPhone 4 take pictures that look like they were taken with a larger, more expensive camera.

Most standalone cameras have an adjustable aperture—the opening through which light travels into the camera—that can be used to produce various photographic effects. A large aperture creates a shallow depth of field, so an object of interest remains crisp while the rest of the scene is blurred. The iPhone has a small aperture, meaning all parts of an image are equally in focus. SynthCam overcomes this limitation by capturing multiple scenes and combining them to make a single image.

Levoy's app is based on his research in computational photography, which uses software to enable digital cameras to capture new types of photographs, such as those that exploit careful timing of the flash and shutter, and to help improve images taken with less sophisticated cameras. Computational photography can also be applied to smart phones, especially since the devices have lots of processing power, and developer tools provide access to a phone's hardware.

"This combination of camera and computational platforms opens up so many things that you can do," says Kari Pulli, Nokia Fellow at the Company's Palo Alto research center in Palo Alto, California. Pulli was not involved in developing the app.

Other apps that use principles from computational photography are already available through Apple's App Store. Some apps, like HDR Camera and TrueHDR, create photos with a higher range of luminance and colors by capturing different exposures in succession and then combining them in a single image. Apps like 360 Panorama and AutoStich Panorama let a person take panoramic photos by automatically stitching together multiple images from a moving camera. There are also many apps, such as Hipstamatic, Instagram, and 100 Cameras in 1, that let people apply filters to their pictures, making them look as if they were taken with a different type of camera.

When a person uses SynthCam, she selects a still point of interest, like a statue, and taps its location on the phone's screen. Then she moves the phone in a small circle around the fixed point for about 10 seconds. The app tracks the point of interest, searching for it in all frames. Realigning all of the images produces the composite one—showing the item of interest in sharp focus and the background out of focus.

In addition to simulating a shallow depth of field, SynthCam collects more light, producing better pictures in low-light conditions. It also removes moving objects from the background, since the composite is captured over 10 seconds or more.

Levoy says he developed the app, which costs 99 cents from the App Store, to let people see what's possible on phone cameras. He expects an explosion of apps that use computational photography techniques over the next few years. "I'm not going to get rich over this," he says. "But if it encourages other people to do the same, then that's a good thing."